Sex In The
Forbidden Zone: When Men In
Power…..Betray Women’s Trust (by Peter Rutter, M.D., 1986) was a
book that helped pull me out of a period of fright I was trying too hard to
manage on my own.
I had no idea how very hard it was!
There is a cost to the quiet! |
Today in light of one more sex abuse scandal, involving one
more man in a position of power, I am thinking about the messages of this book
and what it taught me.
The book helped me at the time by my reading clinical perspectives on the personal harm being done to me and the lack of integrity and exploitativeness that represented in my abuser.
The book helped me at the time by my reading clinical perspectives on the personal harm being done to me and the lack of integrity and exploitativeness that represented in my abuser.
Added to the apparent stepping over the line of moral and
ethical decency of Bill Cosby, I am thinking today, also, of the pain of the
women involved, reminding me of my own. The pain of the abusive acts coupled
with the pain of carrying a secret added to the pain of telling the truth, at
long last.
And, then the backlash as the armchair judges get into
the act, dismissing stories that have taken an enormous amount of courage to
tell. I am not certain the resulting polarization with those on the side of
support makes it much easier. It is all so much pain!
Yet I am sure it does help one regain dignity and balance after awhile -- and -- above all a sense of empowerment.
Even today, several decades later I still struggle with remnants of shame and fear that somehow imbued my rabbi with a greater power over me than I found in myself – or – in my community to help get him away from me.
Even today, several decades later I still struggle with remnants of shame and fear that somehow imbued my rabbi with a greater power over me than I found in myself – or – in my community to help get him away from me.
But now I am more confident of my role as an innocent in
the episode that continued for more than a decade and one-half.
When will it ever stop?
As a psychotherapist I have had far too many reports from
emotionally traumatized clients in similar circumstances. And, sadly enough the
blind eye of those surrounding these abusers of power and betrayers of trust
has, in many ways, been as disheartening to witness, if not more, than the
abusers themselves.
I sought out my rabbi for counsel and guidance in dealing
with an abusive husband. It was my second marriage and the second time I had
chosen a man who would be emotionally abusive. Without the maturity, skill and
support I needed to take care of myself – and my children, fleeing from these
marriages seemed my only option.
With these two husbands the ploy worked well enough to free
me of their direct, personal control over me. However, the consequences still
continue to this day, many years later, in the form of indirect punishments of
me and my children; defamation of character, continued scandal-mongering, power
plays and control games might be the polite terms.
While the rabbi has been deceased now for a number of years,
alive he was not so easily dissuaded as
these two husbands. Oh, the tales I could tell about how it was, if I would.
At the time I still believed in rabbis as viable teachers of
truth. They were the scholars, the wise men who could interpret the mysteries
of life far and away beyond the limited
capabilities of ordinary people such as I. It was difficult to see this
particular rabbi in any other way than I had been reared.
Thus, for more than fifteen years, this esteemed man, my
rabbi, pursued me in ways that were frightening; his pursuit more like
stalking. To this day I have not yet fully cleansed myself of the toxity this
infected me with.
Of course, I told no one.
Who could I tell? I was not accustomed to “telling” the
things that confused and bothered me most. And, he was so very prominent and well-regarded.
I now know, today, that the greater cost was truly that of being
quiet, not having anyone I trusted to tell.
Secrets have so much power over our lives. They warp the clarity
we must rely upon to experience the beauty of life, eating away at the very
fabric of our emotional, physical and spiritual health.
Yet when telling seems to carry with it an equal or greater
threat, how difficult it is to know which way to go.
So, I find myself, as I write these words, pledging, again,
anew to hold a space of loving, caring and compassion for whomever it is that
would seek me out, yearning to free herself of the –
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